Lexacorp's Mailstrip is very hard to find with a Google search and it is miniscule (would you believe 20 KILObytes?), fast, and efficient at removing headers from a saved set of messages (or a single message). The most recent discussion and link I found was from 2015 so I thought it would be worth it to give the information again. First, here's the address of the Lexacorp download site:
http://www.lexacorp.com.pg/lexacorp_utilities.html
And I've attached a screenshot (thank you, Greenshot (http://getgreenshot.org/).
It helps to get a few ducks in a row: I created a folder for the saved messages and saved all the messages in the PMail folder to it (from PMail, with ^S). That was essentially all I needed to do: Mailstrip named the new file xxxxstripped. I opened it in Word and saved to a .doc file for convenience in searching and eliminating any dross that's beyond Mailstrip capabilities.
I was interested to see that Lexacorp, which seems to produce very high-end and probably sophisticated information systems, is located in Papua, New Guinea...
molly
<p>Lexacorp's Mailstrip is very hard to find with a Google search and it is miniscule (would you believe 20 KILObytes?), fast, and efficient at removing headers from a saved set of messages (or a single message). The most recent discussion and link I found was from 2015 so I thought it would be worth it to give the information again. First, here's the address of the Lexacorp download site:</p><p>http://www.lexacorp.com.pg/lexacorp_utilities.html
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</p><p>&nbsp;And I've attached a screenshot (thank you, Greenshot (http://getgreenshot.org/).
</p><p>&nbsp;</p>&nbsp;
<p>&nbsp;It helps to get a few ducks in a row: I created a folder for the saved messages and saved all the messages in the PMail folder to it (from PMail, with ^S). That was essentially all I needed to do: Mailstrip named the new file xxxxstripped. I opened it in Word and saved to a .doc file for convenience in searching and eliminating any dross that's beyond Mailstrip capabilities.</p><p>&nbsp;I was interested to see that Lexacorp, which seems to produce very high-end and probably sophisticated information systems, is located in Papua, New Guinea...</p><p>&nbsp;molly
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